ACSM's Introduction to Exercise Science, Chapter 8
psychomotor function
the ability to integrate cognition with motor abilites
fluid intelligence
the ability to perform reasoning and abstract thought
crystal intelligence
the ability to store information in the brain
What are the primary functions of the neural structure Cortex
A region of the cerebral cortex involved in the planning, control, and execution of voluntary motor functions.
What are the primary functions of the neural structure supplementary motor cortex
Area of the brain that collects and processes information from other areas of the brain and initiates an organized movement.
Name the primary professional organizations in the areas of motor control, motor learning, and motor development.
-American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance (AAHPERD) - North American Society for Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity (NASPSPA)
What are the three stages of information processing?
1) Stimulus recognition -collecting information from the environment, which is then identified or recognized as a pattern. 2) Response selection -deciding what response to make with the information, including determining the stimulus-response compatibility. 3) Response programming -organizing and initiating an action after a stimulus has been identified and a response has been selected.
Describe the following components of the multistore memory model: Short-term memory
An individual's conscious or working memory. Units of information are collected from either the short-term sensory store or from the long-term memory and stored for short periods of time. The presentation of information and the organization of practice can affect how an individual organizes information in the short-term memory store. Units of information can be remembered more easily if grouped together in some systematic way. The duration of short-term memory is considered 1 to 60 seconds, if the though process of the individual is uninterrupted.
What are the primary functions of the neural structure Cerebellum?
Area of the brain that serves to coordinate complex voluntary movements, posture, and balance in humans.
Describe the following components of the multistore memory model: Short-term sensory store
Collects information from the environment through the senses. The short-term sensor store has an unlimited capacity for storing information, but has a storage duration that is very short. This signifies that individuals can hold a lot of information from the sense, but for less than 1 second. The short-term sensory store holds information while a decision is made on the importance of the information. This decision is additionally made by selective attention, which requires an individual to actively choose one unit of information to pay attention to at a time.
Describe how crystal intelligence and fluid intelligence interact with aging to influence psychomotor function.
Crystal intelligence is derived largely from education experiences and knowledge. Crystal intelligence is primarily about storing information, and it can increase until an individual reaches about 60 years of age. It is a state of the mind based on education, because it is a measure of well-established pathways in the brain, not the formation of new ones. Fluid intelligence is primarily about reasoning and abstract thought. Learning is considered a mechanism of fluid intelligence. Essentially, fluid intelligence is a measure of the state of the brain because it is a measure of an individual's ability to make new and unique connections. Fluid intelligence starts to decrease when an individual enters the fourth decade of life and continues to decline as the individual ages. The rate at which an individual loses fluid intelligence is related to the amount than an individual uses their fluid intelligence. The more an individual uses his or her mind, the slower the decline in psychomotor function.
Describe the following components of the multistore memory model: Long-term memory
Individuals must move skills to storage in the long-term memory in order to keep them in memory. Information deemed important enough to store permanently is sent from short-term memory to long-term memory, which is believed to have an unlimited storage capacity and storage duration. Even though capacity and duration are seemingly limitless, individuals can forget information that they used to remember. The information is not lost in the memory, but the individual has simply failed to retrieve the information from long-term memory.
List the primary stages of motor development
Motor development includes the study of changes throughout the life span and how motor performance is affected by those changes. - Parental - Infancy - Early childhood and later childhood - Adolescence - Adulthood - Older adulthood
What are the primary functions of the neural structure Basal Ganglia
Structures in the brain area that are responsible for movement organization, scale and amplitude of movement, and perceptual-motor integration
How are summary knowledge of results and fading knowledge of results used to improve motor skill performance?
Summary knowledge of results requires individuals to complete several trials of a single skill or movement without receiving any information about his or her performance. After completion of the trails, knowledge of results about hose trails is provided to the individual. Summary knowledge of results can be strongly detrimental to practice performance compared with when knowledge of results is given immediately after each trail, but it may facilitate better learning of a motor skill. In addition, if an individual is to learn a complex task, more immediate knowledge or results should be given than if the same individual was learning a simple motor skill or movement. As an individual completes a practice session and improves performance of the movement or motor skill, the optimal time between completion of the movement or skill and the delivery of knowledge of results increases. Moreover, the fading knowledge of results process involves a systematic reduction in the amount of knowledge of results given to an individual during a practice session. Fading knowledge of results benefits learning by helping an individual solve the motor skill problem early in practice.
closed-loop theory
The closed-loop theory of motor control asserts that sensory information necessary to control motor performance is received by the nervous system during the movement. The closed-loop theory of motor control enhances the accuracy of muscle actions, because movements of the body can be controlled and adjusted as they are occurring
Open-loop theory
The open-loop theory suggests that individuals do not receive feedback from the joints, proprioreceptors, and muscles of the body during movement. The open-loop theory also suggests that body movements are completely preplanned prior to the initiation of the movement. This type of system results in faster movements than the closed-loop system, because the time it takes to provide feedback is eliminated from the process.
Describe the relationship between practice performance and task difficulty.
The relationship between practice performance and task difficulty shows that as the motor task difficulty increases, practice performance of the skill decreases. As the movement skill becomes more challenging, an individual's performance deteriorates.
Motor Development
The study of motor performance throughout the life span from birth through old age.
Motor Learning
The study of the acquisition of basic and advanced movement skills that are used in everyday activities
Motor Control
The study of the understanding of the mechanisms by which the nervous and muscular systems coordinate body movements.
What is the difference between practice and learning?
Understanding the distinction between practice and learning is critical because an individual's performance during practice is not necessarily an indicator of learning. A practice-learning paradox exists because certain variables affect practice performance and retention performance in an opposite manner. When practicing variations of a movement, instead of practicing the same movement repeatedly, hinders practice performance but enhances learning. For example, asking an individual to repeatedly shoot a basketball from the same spot on the floor will enhance the individual's ability to successfully make that particular shot in practice. However, asking the individual to repeatedly take shots from different spots on the floor will enhance the learning of the shooting skill but will likely result in fewer successful shots being made during the practice. Individuals must strike a balance between practicing skills repeatedly to enhance performance of the skill and practicing different skills to enhance learning.
What are the primary functions of the neural structure Premotor cortex
Works to control many of the body's more complex patterns of coordinated muscle activity.
selective attention
a process that requires an individual to actively choose one unit of information to pay attention to at a time
motor cortex
a region of the cerebral cortex involved in the planning, control, and execution of voluntary motor functions
supplementary motor cortex
area of the brain that collects and processes information from other areas of the brain and initiates an organized movement
cerebellum
area of the brain that serves to coordinate complex coluntary movements, posture, and balance in humans.
cognitive psychology
branch of psychology studying the mental processors involved in perception
peripheral motor system
component of the nervous system that is responsible for controlling the motor patterns that are executed and the force generated by the muscle during contraction
longitudinal
following a sample of individuals over a period of time
maturational theorists
individuals who believe that the chief principle of developmental change in an individual is maturation
proprioreceptors
nervous structures in the body that are responsible for sensing body position
cross-sectional
selection of a sample of subjects to represent the population as a whole
basal ganglia
structures in the brain that are responsible for movement organization, scale and amplitude of movement, and perceptual-motor integration
contextual interference
the interference that results from practicing a number of different tasks within the context of a single practice session
task complexity
the level of difficulty required to complete a motor task
relative task difficulty
the level of difficulty required to complete a motor task relative to an individual's level of ability
multistore memory model
the most widely used model to explain memory storage in humans
challenge point
the point in the learning process where optimal learning is occurring
body stabilization
the process of holding the body in a desired position
decoding
the process of moving information from long term memory store to short term memory store
encoding
the process of moving information from short-term store to long-term memory store
motor learning
the study of acquisition of basic and advanced movement skills that are used in everyday activities.
neuroanatomy
the study of the structure and function of the central and peripheral nervous systems
reaction time
the time it takes to receive and respond to a stimulus
chronometric method
using reaction time to measure an individual's response to a stimulus
stimulus recognition
when an individual collects information from the environment
response selection
when an individual decides what to do after collecting and processing information
response programming
when an individual initiates an action after a response has been selected
premotor cortex
works to control many of the body's more complex patterns of coordinated muscle activity